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Goodtime Girls

Goodtime Girls

1980TV Series⏱️ 30m
Comedy
7.1
IMDB Rating
67 votes

Four young women share a Washington, D.C. apartment during World War II.

Director
N/A
Writers
N/A
Stars
Annie Potts, Lorna Patterson, Georgia Engel
Release Date
January 22, 1980
Language
English
Country
United States
💬 2
Reviews
📽️ View on IMDB

🎭 Top Cast

Annie Potts
Annie Potts
as Edith Bedelmeyer
Lorna Patterson
Lorna Patterson
as Betty Crandall
Georgia Engel
Georgia Engel
as Loretta Smoot
👤
Francine Tacker
as Camille Rittenhouse
👤
Marcia Lewis
as Irma Coolidge
Merwin Goldsmith
Merwin Goldsmith
as George Coolidge
Peter Scolari
Peter Scolari
as Benny Loman
Adrian Zmed
Adrian Zmed
as Frankie Millardo
👤
Sparky Marcus
as Skeeter
Philip Charles MacKenzie
Philip Charles MacKenzie
as Joey

🎬 Technical Specs

Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Sound
Mono
Color
Color
Filming Location
Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
Production
Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions, Paramount Television

🏷️ Keywords

laugh tracklingerie sliphome frontfriendship between womenworld war two

🎯 Categories

Comedy

⭐ Featured Review

Short Lived TV show with early Annie Potts, Peter Scolari
by richard.fuller12002-05-25

"Having the look of an episode of Soap or Golden Girls, obviously from the same creator, Goodtime Girls was about four girls, volunteers, secretaries, whatever, who share a room in D.C. Annie Potts was the star and had the believability to be a creature of the forties. So did Dance Fever's/T. J. Hooker's Adrian Zmed, who played military reject (for his flat feet) cab driver Frankie. Peter Scolari, who would go on to be in Bosom Buddies with Tom Hanks, was Frankie's roomie, another tenant in the building, who juggled and rode a unicycle and had very few lines. I remembered one of..."

💡 Did You Know?

Co-stars Lorna Patterson and Francine Tacker were both married to Robert Ginty. Patterson married him in November 1983, only 50 days after his divorce from Tacker.

📖 Synopsis

Four young women share a Washington, D.C. apartment during World War II.